![]() If you want to store more than applications on an SSD, you should consider the cheaper 512 GBs SSD. You need to be asking what size SSD you think you may need. You can view the full discussion in Communities.ĪLL SSDs are fast, relatively instantaneous. On Saturday, March 3, 2018, 10:17:49 PM EST, Apple Support Communities Updates wrote: You could easily toss several hundred into upgrading that one and it still wont' run a newer operating system version. If you want major tweaking done and you can't DIY then you may be better off thinking a new(er) Mac in terms of price point. ![]() You've also reached a point where you can't upgrade OSX beyond what's already an old version for Apple (and probably Adobe too). Doing a HDD on an iMac can be like brains surgery. If you do something like RAM alone and you do it yourself then maybe. Tweaking anything will help, but is it worth it with a 11 year old Mac? Apple would say not, they stopped supporting it 6 years ago. Not the fastest but many in Apple's current lineup are similar GHz.Īdobe is going to be a hog. ![]() If you really want speed you need a SSD but those are a lot more pricey per GB. Hard drives is many Macs run at a slower spin speed of 5400 rpm. ![]() 4 GB RAM is on the low end when it comes to graphics and video work. ![]()
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